Pendulum Length and Period Calculations

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating pendulum lengths and periods using the formula T=2pi√(L/g). The first problem involved determining the pendulum length on Earth, resulting in 0.993 m, and then calculating the period on Venus, yielding 2.10 seconds. The second problem required finding a new length for a 2-second period, leading to a reduction of 0.095 m from the original length. Participants noted that the second question was misinterpreted initially, as it actually pertained to a different type of oscillator. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding the correct context and parameters for each problem.
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Homework Statement


voUVf65.png


Homework Equations


T=2pi√(L/g)

The Attempt at a Solution


I am just making sure I am doing these right.
For the first one, I used the equation to determine the length it would be on Earth. The length I got was g/pi^2 = 0.993 m. I thought that it would have to stay the same length on Venus too, so I used the equation again, given the length and gravity of Venus, to find the period. My answer: 2.10 seconds.
For the second one, I used the equation again, plugged in 2 seconds for T, 0.904g for g, then found L = 0.898 m. I subtracted this from the original length I found from the first problem. My answer: 0.993-0.898 m = 0.095 m (shorten the pendulum by 0.095 m).
 
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reminiscent said:
For the second one, I used the equation again, plugged in 2 seconds for T, 0.904g for g, then found L = 0.898 m. I subtracted this from the original length I found from the first problem. My answer: 0.993-0.898 m = 0.095 m (shorten the pendulum by 0.095 m).

if i am correct the 2nd problem seems to be decoupled from the 'Gandma 's clock' as its a spring oscillator and springs do not oscillate as simple hanging bob and its time period has other parameters... like spring constant and mass. so think about the second one in a different way !
 
OK, for the first question. However, a nice way to approach this problem is in terms of ratios. If you set up an expression for the ratio of the period on Venus to the period on earth, you won't need to find the length.

Your answer to the second question doesn't appear to correspond to the second question.
 
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TSny said:
OK, for the first question. However, a nice way to approach this problem is in terms of ratios. If you set up an expression for the ratio of the period on Venus to the period on earth, you won't need to find the length.

Your answer to the second question doesn't appear to correspond to the second question.
I see what you are saying for the first one. However, for the second one, all I did was find the length the pendulum has to be in order to get a period of 2 seconds. I found that length, and I subtracted it from the length it was on Earth, and my answer is that she would have to shorten it by 0.095 m. That makes sense to me.
 
reminiscent said:
I see what you are saying for the first one. However, for the second one, all I did was find the length the pendulum has to be in order to get a period of 2 seconds. I found that length, and I subtracted it from the length it was on Earth, and my answer is that she would have to shorten it by 0.095 m. That makes sense to me.

but the second questio is asking about something else-
how far is the box from equilibrium position if the elastic potential...( no question about shortening etc.
 
I apologize, I took a screenshot of the wrong problem for the 2nd part. Here is the right problem:
3DchZU3.png
 
reminiscent said:
I apologize, I took a screenshot of the wrong problem for the 2nd part. Here is the right problem:
never mind ..it happens ..we were just wondering ...
so Grandma's problem gets solved by you - as time period is directly proportional to sqrt(L) reducing 2.10 sec to 2.0 will need shortening of the length.thanks
 

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